Lê Ngã rebellion
Lê Ngã rebellion | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Việt anti-Ming rebels | Ming dynasty | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Lê Ngã[n 1] | Li Bin | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
unknown | unknown |
The Lê Ngã rebellion of 1420, also known as the uprising of Lê Ngã,[1] was a rebellion against the Chinese Ming dynasty led by a former Việt slave named Lê Ngã, during the Fourth Era of Northern Domination.
In 1407, around 9,000 Việt elitists, including scholars, craftmen, physicians, medicine experts were shipped to China proper, where these people were retrained in Chinese and could be sent back to Jiaozhi as bureaucrats.[2] In addition, 7,700 Việt tradesmen, artisans and workers were sent to Beijing, the second capital of Ming Empire to build the Forbidden City,[3] while the Ming state took direct control over Đại Việt's metal mines, precious aromatics and pearls.[4]
In 1420, Lê Ngã rallied people to the woods of Lạng Sơn and subsequently declared king. He said to his followers, "If you want to be rich, follow me!" The rebels marched down the Red River Delta, seized Xương Giang. Lê Ngã's former slave owner saw Ngã and attacked him. The Ming military commander of Jiaozhi–Marquis Li Bin, arrived and forced Lê Ngã's rebels to flee into the mountains.[1] After hearing the news, the Yongle Emperor felt angry and demanded that Lê Ngã be captured and transported to the Ming capital. Unable to immediately have the emperor's demand succeed, Li Bin seized and sent an innocent man instead, claiming that it was Lê Ngã.
Lê Ngã would not surrender until Huang Fu–the surveillance and prosecution commissioner of Jiaozhi, intervened.[5]
Notes
[edit]- Footnote
- ^ In Chinese records, he was called Li Hung (黎餓).
- Citations
- ^ a b Taylor (2013), p. 181.
- ^ Ki Che (2019), pp. 126.
- ^ Wade (2016), pp. 18.
- ^ Wade (2016), pp. 19.
- ^ Taylor (2013), p. 182.
References
[edit]- Ki Che, Leung Angela (2019), "A "South" Imagined and Lived: The Entanglement of Medical Things, Experts, and Identities in Premodern East Asia's South", in Tagliacozzo, Eric (ed.), Asia Inside Out: Itinerant People, Harvard University Press, pp. 122–145, ISBN 978-0-67498-763-0
- Taylor, K. W. (2013). A History of the Vietnamese. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-87586-8.
- Wade, Geoff (2016), "Domination in Four Kets: Ming China and its Southern Neighbours 1400 1450", in Clunas, Craig (ed.), Ming China: Court and contact 1400 1450, British Museum, pp. 15–25, ISBN 978-0-86159-205-0